Zac Efron stars as Chickie, a staunch supporter
of the Vietnam War who spent his time lazing at his parents
house and drinking at the local bar, in director Peter
Farrelly's follow-up to the Oscar-winning "Green Book" (2018).
"The Greatest Beer Run Ever," featuring stars Billy Murray and
Russell Crowe, premiered at the Toronto International Film
Festival on Tuesday with screaming fans lining the streets.
"Most Vietnam War movies, that I know of, are told from the
soldier's point of view. This one is told from a civilian who
goes into the middle of it, and so it's a different perspective.
I think it changes the tone of what you're seeing and elevates
the horror in some ways," Farrelly told Reuters.
The real Chickie told Reuters that the idea to head to Vietnam
came to him after he walked through an anti-war demonstration in
New York City's Central Park.
"My friends would die at war and people who lived in my hometown
were demonstrating against them. (Protesters were) referring to
them as baby killers and that hurt. It absolutely hurt," he
said.
In part to support his friends and his country and in defiance
of the Vietnam War protesters, Chickie took a job on a merchant
ship bound for Vietnam, a duffle bag full of beer in tow.
It was not until Chickie saw the horrors of the war for himself
that his opinion started to shift. One of the moments that
opened his eyes was when he was walking alone in the war zone,
trying to find his way, when a child ran out from the bushes.
"I was in (civilian clothing), and I wasn't a soldier. I didn't
have a gun. There was nothing there. No tanks, no weapons. The
terrified look on the child's face. ... Terrible."
Adapted from Chickie's novel of the same name, the bizarre
experience was what Efron was drawn to about the story.
"I couldn't believe that this really happened. I remember
repeatedly flipping back to the front cover at every twist and
turn that was happening in the script and just rereading 'this
is a true story.' I was shocked and mesmerized by this journey,"
Efron told Reuters.
(Reporting by Jenna Zucker; Editing by Will Dunham)
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